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Word: reporter (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

Your account of the recent award of scholarships given by the American Academy in Rome [TIME, May 27] is even more disappointing than your report of the same event in previous years. You seem to imply that to Mr. Eugene Savage belongs most of the credit for the splendid record of the Yale School of Fine Arts during the past years. Mr. Savage, I believe, would be the first person to deny this. As Leffmgwell Professor of Painting his influence reaches only a small section of the Yale Art School. He has nothing to do with the instruction in architecture...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Jun. 17, 1935 | 6/17/1935 | See Source »

...alienating the Press, whose good offices our profession has had many occasions to acknowledge with gratitude." But the Committee found cause to snarl because "a quasi-official endorsement of the publicity was offered by the assignment of the New York Academy of Medicine of its press liaison officer to report the operation for the Associated Press." That special reporter for the A. P. was tousle-headed Dr. lago Galdston (born Israel Goldstein), 41, executive secretary of the New York Academy's Medical Information Bureau and Press Relations Committee, who had, before the McHenry girl reached Fall River, assured...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Chap. Ill, Art. I, Sec. 4. | 6/17/1935 | See Source »

...result of two relatively new procedures in the practice of medicine, the staff of London's Middlesex Hospital last week was able to report perfection of a slow and safe method of transfusing blood. One of those helpful procedures is the preservation of human blood by the addition of substances to keep it in a clear, unclotted, fluid condition. Thus gallons of blood may be accumulated from donors, kept in a refrigerator until needed for a transfusion. The other helpful procedure is venoclysis, the slow drop-by-drop introduction into a vein, through a hollow needle, of a salt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Slow Transfusion | 6/17/1935 | See Source »

...This is a proposal to use $24,000,000 of the people's money to perpetuate in control of one of our railroads a group of executives who have wrecked that road twice. . . . The Interstate Commerce Commission, in a blistering report, denounced the directors as the wreckers of the property, but the road was reorganized with these same men in control. Now the insiders-the same men who piloted it through two failures-are trying to reorganize...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Powermen to Arms | 6/17/1935 | See Source »

...Nobody, I should think . . . can but have the most sincere sympathy with Miss Puddifoot . . . ruined in her business at the very outset of her career. That, however, is beside the question. . . . You have got to decide . . . whether the report each [newspaper] published is fair and accurate. . . . These are all of them great newspapers. . . . The fact that they deal with subjects which are unpleasant in their nature is no ground for saying that they are pandering to the tastes of the more prurient-minded. After all, these newspapers are not written only for the edification of high-minded, refined, and delicately...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Puddifoot & Tidmarsh | 6/17/1935 | See Source »

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